Miscellaneous tax resisters → individual war tax resisters → Mike Palecek

Tax resisters resist from many motives, sometimes more than one at once. For instance, some war tax resisters resist as a form of conscientious objection — they’re unwilling to participate in war financing. Others resist as a form of protest — they want to resist taxes as a way of emphasizing their opposition to the government’s policies or to call their opposition to the attention of the powers that be through civil disobedience. Many war tax resisters share both of these motives.

For those that have protest as a motive, simply refusing to write a check to the IRS when they file their returns in April often doesn’t seem enough. How will the government distinguish their refusal to pay as a protest from someone else’s refusal to pay for other motives? For this reason, such war tax resisters will often include a letter of explanation along with their tax filing that explains their motives.

But lately, the IRS has been interpreting these letters of explanation as part of the tax filing itself, and has been threatening resisters with a $5,000 penalty for “asserting a frivolous position” in their filing.

, Mike Palecek at Pacific Free Press shares his experience with one of these “frivolous filing penalty” threats. The last two years, he has accompanied “crossed-out” tax returns with letters of explanation of the following sort:

Hello. Enclosed is my tax form for this year.

It is crossed-out because I do not wish to cooperate with the government of George W. Bush.

President Bush has chosen to spend our tax dollars on war and killing while cutting spending on social programs.

As a Christian, I cannot go along with this.

I must protest.

Note that the letter is not taking any legal positions whatsoever — frivolous or not. Palecek is merely saying that he is not paying because he does not want to cooperate with the government, and indicating how the government has lost his support.

Is that enough to trigger a frivolous filing penalty? Or, legally, should it simply be a failure-to-file or failure-to-pay penalty? The IRS sent Palecek a letter saying they considered his filing to be frivolous, and threatening him with a $5,000 penalty if he doesn’t refile properly.

The law that covers this is Subtitle F, chapter 68, Subchapter B, part Ⅰ, section 6702 of the U.S. Tax Code (the fine has been raised from $500 to $5,000 and some of the wording has changed since the version of law that’s posted at the link above). It says that the frivolous filing penalty can be assessed on someone who “files what purports to be a [tax] return … but which — (A) does not contain information on which the substantial correctness of the self-assessment may be judged, or (B) contains information that on its face indicates that the self-assessment is substantially incorrect; and [this]… — (A) is based on a position which [is] frivolous…, or (B) reflects a desire to delay or impede the administration of Federal income tax laws.”

In support of this section, the IRS periodically publishes a list of positions it considers frivolous. Conscientious tax resistance is one such position:

Taxpayers may not refuse to file tax returns and may not claim deductions or credits on their tax returns based on their opposition to government programs or policies. Any claim that individuals may reduce their federal tax liability based on objections to the use of the taxes to support government programs or policies is frivolous and has no merit.

The question then is whether a letter like Palecek’s can be reasonably interpreted as a “claim that [he] may reduce [his] federal tax liability based on [his] objections” or whether it is best understood simply as an explanation of his decision to disobey the law without any intention of making legal claims as to what he believes he may or may not do within the law.

Practically a question like this one will be answered by some level of the government bureaucracy, and so the rules of logic and language and such are at best an imperfect guide. I could see it going either way.

Of note, the IRS policy states that people “who file a purported return of tax… based on one or more of these [frivolous] positions are subject to a penalty… if the purported return of tax does not contain information on which the substantial correctness of the self-assessed determination of tax may be judged or contains information that on its face indicates the self-assessed determination of tax is substantially incorrect [emphasis mine]. It seems to me that this means if you file a correct and accurate return, only refusing to enclose a check, the IRS policy is to not consider this a frivolous filing even if you accompany your filing with a letter explaining your conscientious objection. (Palecek’s letter accompanied a “crossed-out” return, which probably did not “contain information on which the substantial correctness” of the return could be determined.)

There is, however, another section of this preamble that says “The penalty may also be applied if the purported return… reflects a desire to delay or impede the administration of Federal tax laws” — perhaps this would apply.

Myself, I think the best policy here is to simply refrain from poking the hornets’ nest. If you resist your taxes and you feel the need to make some noise about it, don’t make your noise in the direction of the IRS, but start a blog, or send a letter-to-the-editor, or write your congressperson, or send an email to your friends and family.

If you do get a “frivolous filing” warning letter, don’t panic — according to the letter, if you re-file in a non-frivolous fashion within 30 days of getting the letter, they say they’ll forget all about it.

NWTRCC has also prepared a “What to do if you receive a ‘Frivolous’ warning letter” guide.


, I related the story of Mike Palecek, who got hit with a “frivolous filing penalty” warning letter when he enclosed a letter of protest with his tax return.

His story has since been picked up by the Des Moines Register.

It turns out that the adjective “frivolous” has a long history of being applied to uncomfortable protest statements — critics of the U.S. Declaration of Independence called its complaints “false and frivolous.”


The issue of NWTRCC’s newsletter, More Than a Paycheck, is out. It includes:

  • The reports from the 12th International Conference on War Tax Resistance and Peace Tax Campaigns from Ruth Benn and Ed Hedemann that I linked to .
  • Clare Hanrahan’s review of We Won’t Pay: A Tax Resistance Reader:

    “both daunting and encouraging and well worth the considerable reading time… captures in one indexed volume many individual acts and campaigns of conscientious objection to war and of revenue refusal to tyrannical governments… sincere voices and challenging arguments.”

  • Elizabeth Boardman’s review of American Quaker War Tax Resistance:

    “167 intelligent and intense writings on the challenging question of whether people of conscience should pay for war… People struggling with this moral issue today will be guided by the writings in this book and may find some wonderful language to use in their own statements of conscience… a straightforward and compelling book.”

  • Some notes on frivolous filing warnings, new tax laws, and IRS enforcement techniques.
  • Notes about tax resisters Bob Williams, Mike Palecek, and David Schenck, about the trial of two Los Alamos National Laboratory protesters, and about the upcoming New England Regional Gathering of War Tax Resisters and Supporters.
  • A story about long-time resister Thomas Wilson. The state of Massachusetts suspended his dental license 21 years ago when he stopped cooperating with state tax laws because the state, in turn, was acting as a collection agency for the IRS. Wilson kept practicing dentistry without a license, and was able to keep doing so until this year when he was forced to shut down after a competing dentist ratted him out to the state board of registration.

    At 75 Tom is philosophical about closing the door on his professional life and has no regrets about his choices. “In this present economy we’re getting a payback for what the government has been doing and what I haven’t been paying for and resisting all this time. People ask if war tax resistance changes anything. I can’t say that, but it’s helped me put up with what we have to put up with in this country.”


A couple of war tax resisters have their say:

First, Don Woodside brings us the scoop on war tax resistance in Canada:

Gandhi said the responsibility to resist evil is as great as the responsibility to promote the good. A small, determined group of Canadians began resisting their financial involvement in war in , and since that time more than 1,000 of them have deposited military taxes in the Peace Tax Fund operated by Conscience Canada. They were conscientious objectors who could see that in modern wars, governments need to conscript not their bodies, but their money.…

Canada has a 200-year history of respect for conscientious objection to bearing arms. Furthermore, as far back as , Upper Canada allowed conscientious objectors to redirect their militia taxes to public works, and during the First and Second World Wars to purchase peace bonds instead of war bonds.

What are the consequences? In the 30 years Conscience Canada has existed, there have been no criminal charges, no seizures of goods and no financial penalties other than the standard rate of interest on unpaid taxes. We know of only one person who was audited. Most of the time, the Canada Revenue Agency will collect the money they consider owing within a year or two. At that point the conscientious objector can take back the money he or she deposited in the trust fund.

Second, Mike Palecek tells of the “frivolous filing” penalty the U.S. government gave him when he sent a letter of protest in lieu of his tax return:

We have a semblance of representation, but not in reality.

Nobody asks you if you want to build more prisons. Nobody asks you if you want to bomb children in Iraq. Nobody asks you if you want your money to go to the poor, to schools, to roads.

Nobody ever asks.

So sometimes, sometimes you just have to tell them.

Every year we are asked to pay our taxes, send in our forms, pay for the bullets, the bombs that kill the children, the men and women.

We are given no choice.

Just as we were given no choice as children whether or not to rise before class and say the pledge of allegiance to America’s wars.

We’re not children anymore.

Our acquiesence has real consequence.


The War Tax Resisters Penalty Fund is designed to encourage and support war tax resisters by partially defraying the cost of penalties and interest they might incur as a result of their resistance. The fund does this by sending out periodic appeals to its members, asking each one to share equally in reimbursing the resister.

In this way, people who are unable or unwilling to do war tax resistance themselves, but who are sympathetic to war tax resistance, can help people who are bolder or better-situated than themselves.

It just released a new appeal for funds, the first one since February 2009. The new appeal covers $10,776 in penalties and interest charged against two war tax resisters: Mike Palecek and Michael C. Moore. Palecek’s is for a $5,000 “frivolous filing” penalty, which he plans to appeal (if he wins the appeal, he will return the $5,000 to the Penalty Fund).

Spread out over the various fund participants, this comes to $38.90 per person.

If you would like to join up with (or donate to) the War Tax Resisters Penalty Fund, write to them at P.O. Box 25, North Manchester, IN 46962.